Gujarati language ... Gujarati[a] is an Indo-Aryan language native to the Indian state of Gujarat and spoken predominantly by the Gujarati people. Gujarati is descended from Old Gujarati (c. 1100–1500 CE). In India, it is one of the 22 scheduled languages of the Union.
Gujarati language, Indo-Aryan member of the Indo-Iranian group of Indo-European languages. Gujarati is officially recognized in the Indian constitution and is spoken by more than 46 million people.
Gujarati is an Indo-Aryan language that is native to the Indian state of Gujarat, which is located on the Western Coast of India near Pakistan. It is mainly spoken by the Gujarat people.
Gujarati grammar is very similar to that of other Indo-Aryan languages such as Hindi, Bengali, and Punjabi. Like all these languages, Gujarati is agglutinative, i.e., it adds suffixes to roots to build words and to express grammatical relations.
Gujarati is an Indo-Aryan language that belongs to the larger Indo-European language family. It has evolved over centuries from Old Western Rajasthani, a language spoken between 1100 and 1500 AD, which is the ancestral precursor to both Gujarati and Rajasthani languages.
Gujarati is a regional language of India, restricted in great measure to the state of Gujarat and related to its neighbor Marathi. It originated in western India after the demise of the Gurjara-Pratihara dynasty, which gave the language its name, at the beginning of the second millennium CE.
While Gujarat is the primary region where Gujarati is spoken, the language has a global presence due to the extensive migration of the Gujarati people. In India, Gujarati is also widely spoken in the financial hub of Mumbai.